Sign in to follow this  
Followers 0
Preety_India

Paranormal and Supernatural

100 posts in this topic

 

The cabinet door flapping ghost in the tutorial video of Benivey2.. Most realistic ghost evidence upto date. 

 


INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

1987-The Ilkley Moor Alien Photograph..

An extremely compelling account of alien abduction that took place in 1987 in the Ilkey Moor, Yorkshire, U.K. is a unique case which may include one of the very few photographs taken of a live alien being. The main character and only witness of a UFO and alien being is one Philip Spencer, a retired policeman. He claims to have been taken aboard an unidentifed flying object, and snap one photograph of an unknown being.

 

 

 

 

Carmen Reed, Snedeker Connecticut haunting 

 

 

Smurl Family Haunting 

 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

Alabama tin foil alien incident. Witnessed by Jeff Greenhaw. 

Falkville 1973

In 1973, another police chief in a small north Alabama town took a photo of what he thought was an alien being.

That October, Falkville Police Chief Jeff Greenhaw responded to a call from a woman who was “excited” as she reported seeing something strange. Greenhaw responded and came upon a 6-foot tall metallic creature with an antennae on its head.

“It looked like his head and neck were kind of made together... he was real bright, something like rubbing mercury on nickel, but just as smooth as glass-different angles give different lighting. I don't believe it was aluminum foil… It was running faster than any human I ever saw.”

 

Greenhaw was ridiculed and lost his job. Many people believed someone had played a prank on the chief. However, the photo he snapped of the creature that night can be seen in books on alien life.

 

4bghr2.jpg

 

 

 

Max Headroom incident. 

 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

The curious case of Dorothy Eady 

 

 

The strange case of Michael Taylor who said the devil motivated him

 

 

The mysterious case of Guarapiranga mutilation.

In 1988, the body of a middle-aged man was found on the banks of Guarapiranga Reservoir in Brazil. 

 

 

Gable film

The Gable film is a film by Mike Agrusa which went viral on the internet during 2007. The film, allegedly filmed during the 1970s, depicts what appears to be a Michigan dogman.

Description

The film starts with the sons of a man named Aaron Gable riding snowmobiles on an open stretch of land. It then cuts to Gable chopping wood before reaching for a drink. The film then jumps to a view of the forest before cutting to Gable's dog playing and running around on a road.

After a short amount of time, the film jumps to Aaron Gable repairing his truck. Soon after, he begins to drive down a road while his son operates the camera. The latter starts to record a creature crawling on all fours in the forest. Gable stops the truck and takes the camera off of his son. He follows the creature's trail on foot. After a few shots of Gable walking and running through the woods, the film cuts to a shot of the creature, stood still and watching Gable.

The animal subsequently charges at Gable, prompting him to run. The creature's jaws are visible for a brief second before Gable drops to the ground.

 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

 

The mysterious dobby alien creature on night camera in driveway doing chicken dance. 

 

 

 


INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

The Flannan   Isle lighthouse mystery. 

 

 

The mysterious man from Taured. 

 

 

The mysterious haunted dybbuk box

 

 

Carmen Reed, Snedeker Connecticut haunting 

 

 

Haunted Poveglia Island 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

Annabelle Doll 

 

 

 

Robert the Doll 

 

 

 

 

 

The curse of the hope diamond 

 

 

 

The curse of the Ourang Medan 

 

 

The case of the Anguished man 

 

 

James Dean's Car 

 

 

 

 

The mysterious crying boy's painting 

 

 

 

The women of lemb 

 

Haunted Vase of Basano

 

The hands resist him 

 

 

Ana Baker's Wedding Dress

 

 

The black orlove diamond 

 

LaPeregrina pearl

 

Busby Chair 

 

Cursed mirror at the Myrtle's Plantation 

 

Screaming skull of Burton Agnes Hall

 

Maori Warrior Masks

 

 

Cursed Iceman Otzi 

 

 

 

 King Tut's curse

 

 

 

Surrey Ghost car 

 

 

Cursed Bulgarian phone number 

35988****

 

 

 

Curse of the kohinoor 

 

 

Terracotta army warriors 

 

 

 

The Atuk curse phenomenon 

 

Belcourt Castle Haunted Chairs

 

 

 

Cursed Ayers Rock

 

 

Curse of the Blarney Stone 

 

 

Driskill Hotel. four-year-old Samantha Houston haunted painting. 

 

 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

The tale of the Wendigo

 

 

The strange death of Gaurav Tiwari

 

 

The mysterious tragic murder death of Debby Constantino and husband caused by invaded spirits during their ghost adventures

 

 

 

 

Cases discussed in the video. 

1. The mysterious deaths of Sonny Graham and Terry Cottle, heart transplant case. 

 

2. Carissa Glen mysterious haunting and suicide. 

 

3.The pollock family mystery. Jacqueline and Joanna and Jennifer and gillian. The Pollock sisters 

 

 

4.Room 428 of Wilson Hall

 

5.the strange solving of the murder of Teresita Basa by her own spirit beyond the grave 

 

 

 

 

The demonic possession and exorcism of Maurice Frenchy Theriault. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The phenomenon of spontaneous human combustion 

 

 

MK Ultra glitch and glitch in the matrix 

NBA player Draymond Green stare. 

 

 

The mystery of the Babushka lady 

 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

The mystery of the summer wind mansion. 

 

 

 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

 

The paranormal phenomenon of the fairy circles. 

 

 

 

The Chaplin sisters using telepathic communication

 

 

The phenomenon of sleep paralysis. 

 

Gettysburg rocks 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

the dyatlov pass incident 

 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

Powers of the Paranormal 

 

 

 

 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

Peche island 

 

The little island lies just off shore in the Detroit River about two kilometres east of Belle Isle. Possibly you’ve noticed its calming greenness as you hurry to work along Riverside Drive and wondered what’s over there. Perhaps you motored over on your boat for a picnic and pondered the picturesque cement bridge. Older readers may remember when the island was supposed to be developed into everything from a swanky housing development to an amusement park and wonder why all these plans fell through.

According to descendants of the French family, which once settled the island for almost 100 years, there is a good reason why Peche, or Peach Island, remains a virtual wilderness in the middle of an urban metropolis: it has a curse on it.

The Native Legend

Before delving into the story of the curse, it is worthwhile to reflect on the fascinating Native Canadian legend about how Peche Island was formed.

The spirit of the Sand Mountains on the eastern coast of Lake Michigan had a beautiful daughter whom he feared would be stolen away. To guard against this, he kept her floating in the lake inside a wooden box tethered to the shore.

The South, North and West Winds battled over this maiden, throwing up a huge storm. The girl drifted away and washed up at the shore of the Prophet, the Keeper of the Gates of the Lakes, at the outlet of Lake Huron. He was happy to find the beautiful castaway.

The Winds soon found her again and teamed up to destroy the Prophet’s lodge. The maiden, the box, parts of the lodge and the Prophet were swept into the water and drifted through Lake St. Clair to the Detroit River. The remnants of the box formed Belle Isle and the old Prophet was lodged further upstream forming Peche Island.
From Legends of Detroit, Marie Watson Hamlin, 1884


The French Connection

On the earliest French maps of this region, the island was named either Isle au Large, or Isle du Large. Possible meanings include “at a distance,” since Peche Island is the farthest island upstream from Detroit before entering Lake St. Clair or “keep your distance,” because of dangerous shallows on the north side.

The island was next called some variation of Peche Isle, including Isle aux Pecheurs and Isle a la Peche, the French word for fish – the island was once used as a fishing station.

In 1789, what is now Ontario was divided into five administrative districts for the regulation of the land. The Board of the Land Office for the Windsor region needed title to the island, which was mostly in the hands of the Indians in order to issue land grants. A treaty with the Indians was accomplished in 1790 for lands in the western Ontario peninsula, but it excluded Peche Island possibly because the Ottawas, Chipewas, Pottawa-tomies and Hurons who signed the treaty wished to retain the island as a fishing ground.

Local businessmen possibly did not notice that Peche Island was not among the lands transferred to the Crown and began petitioning for grants for the land. Alexis Maisonville was among them and it seems that he eventually obtained some sort of title to the island and it even became known as Maisonville’s Island for a time.

Perhaps the first permanent residents of the island were a French Canadian family named Laforet dit Teno. Evidence suggests that the family moved to the island somewhere between 1800 and 1812 and possibly earlier – an entry in surveyor John A. Wilkinson’s notebook for December 27, 1834 says the family had been living on the island for 34 years.

Irvin Hansen Dit Laforet, a descendant, believes the family settled the island even earlier. In his article, “Peche Island: Occupancy and Change of Ownership 1780-1882” he describes how Jean Baptiste Laforest was granted the island in 1780 for his service in the British military as a guide and interpreter and for his family’s steadfast support of the Crown. (No deed was ever found, however, nor was there any evidence of a grant recorded in the land office.)

Jean moved to the island with his wife and his five-year-old son Charles. Jean built a homestead to verify his claim and passed the title onto Charles. In January 1781, Jean Mary Laforest was the first Laforest to be born on Peche Island. They had seven other children.

Apparently, they shared the island with a group of local natives who occupied the western portion, keeping the eastern side for themselves. According to Laforest family legend, Jean bartered with the natives to gain ownership of the island, closing the deal with the exchange of some livestock. The Laforest family lived on the island confident of their ownership for almost 100 years.

By 1834, Charles and Oliver Laforet (the ‘s’ had been dropped by this time) maintained their large families on the island. At that time about 25 acres had been fenced and were under cultivation. The settlers had constructed a house and a barn, but there is no further information about their petition for a grant to the island.

In 1857, Peche Island was finally transferred to the Crown by the Chippewa Indians, but there was no great rush to acquire grants perhaps because local people believed that the island legally belonged to the Laforet family.

In 1868, someone did attempt to purchase it, but because of the belief that it belonged to the Laforet family, no further action was taken.

“They and their ancestors having been in possession for a long series of years, and having always regarded the place as their home, and considered that they would be awarded at least squatters’ privileges in respect of the said Island. …the island may if sold, be sold to the said Laforet or Teno family, provided they are willing and able to pay a fair price therefor.”
Essex County Council, Minutes, June 1868 - June 1873

The last Laforets on the island were Leon (Leo) Laforest and his wife Rosalie Drouillard.

Leo was the grandson of Jean Baptiste and had been born on the island in 1819. He and Rosalie, who had been born on Walpole Island and was the daughter of a Native interpreter, had 12 children, the last being born in 1880.

They raised livestock, grew crops and engaged in commercial fishing. Rosalie supplemented their income by weaving straw hats and selling them in Detroit.

When a deed for the land could not be found, Leon staked out four acres in 1867 when it became part of Canada. He paid taxes on this property until he died in 1882.

In 1870, Benjamin and Damase Laforest, cousins of Leon had entered into an agreement with a local Windsor businessman named William G. Hall concerning commercial fishing. Benjamin filed a quit claim deed at the local township office giving him squatter’s rights.

Many years later, an affidavit confirmed that Leon LaForest had agreed orally to the commercial fishing contract, but he had never signed his name to anything. Hall applied for a land patent of 106 acres in 1870, which included the whole island except for Leo’s four acres. Hall eventually received title to the island, minus the four acres for a payment of $2900 to the Crown.

After Hall’s death in 1882, his executor advertised that Hall’s estate would sell the island, with fishing privileges and this sale raised the question of title.
 

Benjamin Laforet (r.) was involved in a lawsuit with
Hiram Walker over land on the island

Hiram Walker’s sons purchased the property from the Hall estate on July 30, 1883, as a summer home for their father. Benjamin Laforet filed a claim on the 1st of August stating that he and his brother Damase had a one-third interest in a certain parcel of land that was described in the patent from the Crown to Hall.

The case was settled and the Hall Estate was authorized by the Supreme Court of Canada to give the Laforets a one-third share of the $7000 that Walker’s sons paid the estate.

Leo Laforet died on September 26 of that year. According to the Laforet descendants, a group of Walker’s men forced their way into Rosalie’s home and made her and the oldest boys sign the deed over to the Walkers. In Laforet’s article, he writes, “They [Walker’s men] threw $300 on the table and told Rosalie to be out by spring of 1883.”

That winter, while Rosalie and her family were away in Detroit on business, someone came onto their property and ruined the winter stores. Because Rosalie was knowledgeable in the ways of the Natives, they were able to survive until spring.

When it was time to leave, Rosalie got down on her knees and cursed the Walkers and the island. “No one will ever do anything with the island!” were her apparent words.


Walker’s Folly?

Despite his sons’ hopes that he would use the island as a retirement spot, Hiram Walker occupied himself for many years attempting to develop it. For five years, he had canals dug to allow boats to bring in supplies and to ensure the flow of fresh water through the island from Lake St. Clair. Two yachts were purchased – the “Pastime” and the “Lurline” for travelling to the island from Walker’s office and for cruises and parties on the river and lakes.

Walker built what has been described as a 54-room or 40-room mansion. He planted hundreds of trees, put in an orchard, and built a green house to cultivate flowers. He also put in a golf course, stables a carriage house and he installed a generator for electric lights.

It was widely thought that this was no summer “home” for Walker but an attempt on his part to create a resort. The only problem was, his intended market, the society people of Detroit, all went to nearby Belle Isle.


The Curse Takes Hold

Willis Walker, a lawyer who had handled the purchase of the island, died soon afterwards at the tender age of 28.

Hiram did not enjoy the island for long. In June of 1895, he transferred the land to his daughter Elizabeth Walker Buhl because of ill health. (Apparently, she was not a benevolent Walker; legend has it that she did not let the locals pick the island’s abundant peach crop, as had been the case for many years. She had them dumped into the river; they came in their boats to scoop them up.)
 

The ruins of Hiram Walker's island mansion

Hiram was quite ill while he worked on his Peche Island project, suffering a minor stroke before dying in 1899.

Edward Chandler Walker died relatively young in 1915. Prohibition caused embarrassment for sons and grandsons who are American but operating a Canadian based distillery. They didn’t want to be seen as bootleggers so they sold their father’s empire in 1926 only 60 years after he established it.

Hiram Walker & Sons distillery was purchased by Toronto’s Cliff Hatch in 1926 ending the Walker dynasty. The Walker family leaves Walkerville and abandon the town their father founded in 1858. Some remain in the Grosse Point area. At the time of amalgamation with Windsor in 1935, no Walkers lived in Walkerville


How It Affects Island Development

Elizabeth Buhl sold the island to the Detroit and Windsor Ferry Company in 1907. At that time, the president of the company, Walter E. Campbell stated that the island would be made into “one of the finest island summer resorts in America,” and that “the big house…at the upper end of the island…has 40 rooms and will be easily converted into a temporary pavilion at least” according to the Detroit News, Nov. 11, 1907

Mr. Campbell apparently died in the home on the island that same year. The property fell into a state of disrepair. In 1929, the house burned to the ground. Some say a huge lightning bolt hit it.

Needless to say, nothing ever came of Campbell’s plans to create a park on the island. Although the island still legally belonged to the Detroit, Belle Isle and Windsor Ferry Company and after 1939, to its successor the Bob-Lo Excursion Company, the island remained deserted except for picnickers, young lovers and probably rumrunners during Prohibition in 1920s and 30s.

It is believed that the Bob-Lo Company bought the island to deter development of another Bob-Lo Island (an island further down the river near Amherstburg that had was developed as an amusement park until the latter part of the last century).

Peche Island was so neglected that as late as 1955, the employee who guarded the island for the Bob-Lo Company spent his spare time there fishing for sturgeon, trapping muskrats, and hunting ducks.

Despite vigorous efforts by local groups to have the island purchased by some government agency for use as a park, the Bob-Lo Co. retained the island until 1956 when it was sold to Peche Island Ltd. Their plans included filling the island’s water lot in to create a residential area. With this aim in view, the remains of the Walker house were removed in 1957.

The scheme was abandoned that same year, reportedly because of a lack of suitable landfill. Local rumour has it that the plan was in some way connected to the fact that Detroit was short of space for a garbage dump.

Other proposals for the island followed quickly but nothing concrete happened until 1962, when Detroit lawyer and investor E. J. Harris purchased it. His plan included dredging the canals and creating a ski hill and protective islands. A few years later, Sirrah Ltd. purchased the island and its water lot. This despite strong resistance by many Windsor delegations and groups who wished to see the island turned into a public park. Under the direction of E. J. Harris, Sirrah planned and actually began work on an extremely elaborate park area for the island. He constructed several buildings and sewage, hydro, water and telephone were connected to the mainland. The project operated for one season with ferry boats from Dieppe Park and barges from Riverside. Due to financial difficulties and mismanagement, Sirrah declared bankruptcy in 1969 also losing the 50-acre Greyhaven estate in Detroit.

R. C. Pruefer of Riverside Construction purchased the island around that time with the view of developing it into a residential area or commercial recreation park that would have included a marina but due to financial restrictions and other commitments, was forced to sell the island.

In 1971, due to tremendous lobbying by various local conservationist groups, the island was purchased by Government Services with the department of Lands and Forest as the managing agency. The island was also to be used by nature study students. The government planned to spend a couple of million dollars on nature trails, picnic shelters, etc. but there were no funds. In 1974, the property was designated a Provincial park for administrative and budget purposes.

Currently the island is a Windsor municipal park, and the city has no immediate plans to develop it, apart from bathroom facilities. Other than part of the foundation of Hiram Walker’s home, a bridge, some dried up canals and a piles of old bricks here and there, it is pretty much the way it was before the Laforets were forced off the island.

Did Rosalie’s curse come true? 


INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

 

The jersey devil, mothman and dogman monster mysteries. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

The Solway Firth Spaceman

May, 1964

On 23 May 1964, Jim Templeton, a firefighter from Carlisle, Cumberland (now part of Cumbria), took three photographs of his five-year-old daughter while on a day trip to Burgh Marsh.

 

4bjq1g.jpg

 

Madonna of Bachelor's Grove - 1991

The Ghost Research Society of America took this photo at Bachelor's Cemetery in Illinois, after it noticed strange readings on its equipment. Researchers didn't see anything at the time, but when this image was exposed, it showed a woman in white clothing sitting on one of the graves. 

 

 

4bjq10.jpg

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

 

Boot Hill Ghost - 1996

Only Ike Canton's friend was seen when this photo was taken, The mysterious man wearing a hat behind him wasn't. Canton later looked more closely at the photo and decided the figure was, in fact, holding a knife, with the point ending just above his collar.

 

4bfken.jpg

 

Grandpa's Ghost - August 1997

Denise Russell took this photo of her grandma, who lived alone at the time, on 17 August 1997. Even though the photo had been developed, copied and given to other family members, nobody noticed the male figure standing over her until Christmas Day 2000. The Russell family say it's a spitting image of their grandpa who died in 1984.

 

4bjrz4.jpg

 

 

4bjs2y.jpg

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

 

Worstead Church - 1975

Peter Berthelot took this picture of his wife, Diane, sitting on a pew at the Worstead Church in Norfolk, England in 1975. When they had the film developed, they noticed a ghost sitting on the pew behind Diane. A man allegedly stayed in the church all night sometime in 1830 to try and disprove the theory of ghosts, but he claimed the following morning he had in fact seen the white lady seen in this picture.

 

4bjsed.jpg

 

 

Tulip Staircase Ghost - 1966

This photo taken inside the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, England, clearly shows a ghostly figure holding the handrail of the Tulip Staircase. Photo experts have all agreed that it hasn't been tampered with, so is considered a genuine example of ghosts' existence. 

 

4bfh52.jpg

 

 

4bfke1.jpg

 

St Botolph's Church - 1982

If you look carefully in the upper right-hand corner of this photo, you can just make out a translucent figure. It was taken at St Boltoph's Church in 1982 and, at the time, there were only three people in the building. A builder later contacted Chris Brackley, who took the photo, to tell him he recognised the face as being the same as someone he'd previously seen in a coffin in the church.

 

4bjsom.jpg

 

4bjsp4.jpg

 

 

Sefton Church - 1999

This picture at Sefton Church in Liverpool, England, clearly shows a man wearing a black uniform, believed to be the old church minister. There were allegedly only two photographers in the church on the day it was taken, and neither of them recall seeing a physical being standing there when the photo was taken.

 

4bjsnx.jpg

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

Eleonore Zugun case

12 year old Eleonore Zugun was delighted when she discovered coins in the street near her home in Bukovina.

 

As most children would, she picked them up and purchased some candy at the local store, eating it on her way home.

 

When she cheerfully told her grandmother about her good fortune, an atmosphere fell over the room. The old woman grimaced and scolded the child, “Those were the devils coins” she said “Now the devil is in you”.

 

It was at that moment that little Elanore’s life changed forever.

 

Violent paranormal activity plagued her life, windows smashed when she entered a room, objects shifted around by some unseen force, chairs and tables levitated, scratches and claw marks appeared on her face, arms and back

The activity was not dampened by her stay in a covenant.

 Not even an exorcism by the local church could yield results.

Eventually she was turned over to an asylum for the mentally ill, where she resided until an upper class paranormal enthusiast (Countess Wassilko ) managed to sign her out under her care. Elaonore performed many acts of mediumship before circles of paranormal enthusiasts, including automatic writing even though she claimed to be illiterate.

She gained international media attention, and as with most paranormal cases throughout the 1920’s, caught the interest of paranormal investigator Harry price, who deducted that the raven haired Romanian girl was producing the activity herself- although not due to any psychokinetic powers or demonic possession. Price discovered that the scratches were more like welts and rashes resembling hives that would appear whenever the girl was upset or agitated. Others who investigated her claimed to see her scratch herself secretly.

 

He considered the case debunked, and eventually the devil, or “Dracu” as Eleonore called him, took a backseat.

 

 

4bm08l.jpg

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

The mystery of Orphan Alexandra Huerta, 16, used the Ouija board with her brother and cousin after taking powerful 'shamanic' drug Brugsmansia

In a video taken by paramedics that shocked the world this week she can be seen in the depths of 'possession'

MailOnline visited her in her shack in the remote Mexican village of Tepotzlan

 

Mysterious cases of ouija board killings and murders. 

 

https://mysteriousuniverse.org/2017/01/death-from-beyond-bizarre-cases-of-ouija-board-killings/

 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

 

The bizzare death and haunting of Estefania Gutierrez Lazaro.

 

Known as the "Vallecas" case after the area in which it unfolded, the events which took place in a small flat, 8 Luis Marín, in the working class Madrid suburb led to the production of the only police report in the country which is said to be stamped "unexplained".

Later, the senior police officer involved in the investigation would describe what he saw as "horrendous", while two of his colleagues were so panicked by what they witnessed in the flat that they had to leave moments after they entered.

That case also centred on a teenage girl, though her name was not Veronica but Estafania Gutierrez Lazaro.

The eldest of four children, she died suddenly and inexplicably in August 1991, six months after playing with a Ouija board, and aged just eighteen

The movie Veronica was made on her. 

 

 

 

 

Edited by Preety_India

INFJ-T,ptsd,BPD, autism, anger issues

Cleared out ignore list today. 

..

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!


Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.


Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  
Followers 0